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} KEEP UP THE STRUGGLE TO SAVE HUANG PING! MASS MEETING TONIGHT AT I EVERY READER GETS A NEW SUBSCRIBER! 1. Mention the Daily Worker in all leaf- lets, posters and cards issued in your district. 2. Visit former expired subscribers and ask them to renew their subs. 3. Take advantage of the combination of- fers in subscribing for the “Daily”. Central Vol. X, No. 11 Sn Entered as second-class matter ai the Post Office at Now York, N.¥., under the Act of Merch 8 1878. HUSHING, A. F. L. AGENT ENRAGED BY TUUL EXPOSE Interrupts Bill Dunne in Capital Hearing on Black Bill | NEW ‘FREE SPEECH’ IDEA ‘Dunne Demands No Wage Cuts BULLETIN WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 12.— At the hearing today on the Black Bill, Senator Black asked if the Trade Union Unity League and Communist Party were not op- posing this bill “just like the French Party opposed unemployment in- surance” because it makes for bet- ter relations between the classes. William F, Dunne replied that the complete answer to the question is contained in the fact that the T. U. U. L. and C.,P. were the first to raise the demand for compul- sory unemployment insurance and are leading the mass fight for it now. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 12— The Senate Judiciary Sub-Committee hearing this morning on the Black Bill presented a scene of great ex- citement this morning, during and following on a two-hour statement by Bill Dunne representing the Trade Union Unity League. Legislative agent Hushing, of the A. F. of L., ap- parently enraged beyond endurance at the exposure of the treacherous role of Green and the A. F. of L. leadership through their stand on employment insurance, shorter work day, and general role during the cri- sis, interrupted the session and de- nounced Dunrfé as a: “Representa- tive of a foreign government and Communist.” Hushing stated that the Senators and Congressmen were violating their oath of office when they listened to Communists and attacks on the A. F. of Le Represents Workers Tn the midst of the inrush of Cap- itol attendants and Department. of Justice men, Dunne made vigorous protest against the “A. F. of L. agent’s new interpretation of free speech, and {CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) U. S. SEAMEN REFUSE T0 SCAB Militant Unionists Aid French Strike NEW YORK. — The International Beamen’s Club, 140 Broad Si., has re- ceived the following dated Jan. 3 from the General Union of Port Workers of Le Havre, France: “Comrades: We acknowledge to you the magnificent attitude of the fellow seamen of the SS. Liberty, which, Guring the strike of the longshorermen of le Havre, refused to replace these latter, despite the insistence of their officers and the high wages which were offered them. The workers of the Port of le Havre salute this show of solidarity from these comraées, and demand that the organized workers of America do whatever is necessary te stop any punishment being meted out to them by their offi- cers. Long live the solidarity of the workers With revolutionary greetings, For the Strike Committee. E. Lemoine, Secy. The Marine Workers Industrial Union is spreading the news of the strike among American seamen and calling on them to show their sol- idarity. Other branches of the Interna- tional of Seamen and Harborworkers are doing the same, although the striking longshoremen are not affil- jated with the I. S. H. The crew of the Baltimore Mail Line City of Hamburg also refused to work cargo at the skipper’s orders, when the ship was in Le Havre out- ward bound, and again on the home- ward bound trip. So far the M. W. I. U, has received no reports that any of these men has been victimized, 14,000 STRIKE IN BELGIUM BRUSSELS, Jan. 12—Ten thous- and miners and 4,000 metal workers in the Charleroi district started a twenty-four-hour protest strike tuday against new taxes. News Flash WILMINGTON, Del., Jan. 12,— The trial of Ben Gold( secretary of Needle Trades Workers Indus- Union, and six other workers here before a jury com- local businessmen. Gold and the other six were arrested in . the savage attack made by the Wil- police on Column 8 of the Labor Efficiency Gain Under 5-Yr. Plan Beat All Capitalist Records Molotov Cites 40 P. G. Increase, Produced by the Workers’ Voluntary Efforts Second 5-Year Plan to Continue Advance of Socialism, Improve Supplies for Toilers MOSCOW, Jan. 12 (by radio).—The problems of the first year of the second Five-Year Plan were discussed at the joint plenum (full session) of the Central Committee and the Cen- tral Control Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union by Molotoy, head of the Council of People’s Commissars. Daily Molotov emphasized that the prob-®— Jems of the first year of the second plan are most closely connected with the results of the first Five-Year Plan. These results, he said, are quite clear: the Five-Year Plan has been fulfilled and fulfilled in four years. The basic premise is the fact that the Soviet Union gained a decisive victory through the fact that a strong foundation for Socialism has been laid by the industrialization of the country and the collectivization of agriculture. However, it must not be thought that the struggle against class enemies has ceased and all dif- ficulties on the road to Socialism have been overcome. On the con- trary, many difficult problems of building Socialism still remain un- solved. But on the basis of the re- sults of the first Five-Year Plan, the Soviet Union is now in a posi- tion to solve these problems more successfully. Socialist Economy Dominates Passing on to the basic economic problems of 1933, Molotov empha- sized: “Since the socialist elements have already assumed a dominant posi- tion in industry and agriculture and in the goods turnover between city and village, therefore, in regard to the further development of socialist forms, while we continue to move forward, we do not set any new im- portant problems with regard to quantity.” ‘The socialist forms of economy al- ready comprised during 1932 87 per cent of the national income of the entire economy of the Soviet Union. Therefore, said Molotov, there is not much new to be told about the role of the socialist forms of our econ- omy. They dominate unmistakebly. In the year 1933. the capital in- vested in all branches of construc- tion will amount to the immense sum of 18,000,000,000 rubles ($9,000,000,000). The capital to be invested in industry in the first year of the second Five Year Plan will be 11,109,000,000 rubles, as compared with 9,164,000,000 in 1932. The gross output of industry should increase by 16.5 per cent, Industrial export will increase to 34,000,000,000 rubles,( as against 29,200,000,000 in 1932, ° Agriculture ‘ As regards agricultural economy, the principal attention, Molotov said, will be turned to the expansion of (CONTINUED ON PAG# THREE) HEARING MONDAY FOR ROY WRIGHT Demand Police Yield Frame-Up Evidence BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jan. 12.—Subpoenas have been is- sued for Attorney General Thomas Knight of Alabama, the chief of police of Hunts- ville, the desk sergeant at the Huntsville police station, and for Ruby Bates, to appear at the hearing, Monday, on a writ of habeas corpus which will demand the setting of bail for Roy Wright, youngest of the Scottsboro boys. The writ will be argued by Gén- eral George W. Chamlee, 6f Chatta- nooga and Irving Schwab, attorneys for the International Labor Defense. Roy’s mother, Mrs. Ada Wright, will also appear as a witness to estab- lish the boy's age. The attorney general and police officers and Ruby Bates will be re- quired to turn over a letter writ- ten last year by Ruby Bates, in which she categor‘cally denied that any of the nine Scottsboro boys had raped her. The letter was seized and sequestered by the Huntsville police. On the basis of this letter, the at- torneys will demand immediate dis- missal of all charges against Roy Wright. ~ Should this be refused, they will demand immediate setting of bail for him. Roy Wright, in whose case there was a mistrial in the original lynch court of Scottsboro, has been ille- gally held without bail since April, 1931, in Birmingham County jail, ‘where it is a criminal offense under Alabama laws to keep anyone under 16 years of age. Roy Wright was 14 at the time of the Scottsboro lynch hearing, and is now under 16, SPANISH REVOLT NEWS CENSORED Report Rout of Gov't Forces in Barcelona BULLETIN MADRID, Jan. 12.—Government forces today bombed a house in which 19 workers had fortified” themselves. All 19 of the workers are reported to have been killed. Six members of the Civil Guard were wounded in the assault. The government, desperate in the face of the stern struggles of the work- ers for power, bas set fire to many houses in the working class dis- tricts of this city. oe MADRID, Jan. 12.—Besides a strict government censorship commu- nications from a score of important centers is still cut off as a result of the crippling of communications by Teyolutionaries who yesterday seized and burned a number of city halls and proclaimed Soviets to be the only authority in the towns. In Se- ville, Valencia, Cadiz the strike movement has paralized everything. The so-called ‘pirate’ radio. station at Barcelona broadcasts reports of the rout of the government forces and the spread of the strike move- ment there. Fear Martial Law Declaration. Although martial law is actually in effect everywhere it can be en- forced the government. is afraid officially to declare “it. The going over of troops to workers has fright- ened the government and Premier Azana has issued a decree that “at- tempts to subvert the troops must be met with instant capital punish- ment.” This is an incitation to murder against the revolutionary propagandists inside and outside the armed forces, Alteration Painters Union Now Leading Two More Strikes NEW YORK. — Under the leader- ship of the Alteration Painters Un- ion, two strikes are being conducted. One strike is in Galiasia’s shop at 84 West 115th St. affecting 12 men striking for an increase in wages, for weekly pay, recognition of the Alter- ation Painters Union and against the boss forcing his workers to rent rooms in his house. The other strike is at the Shumer Bath, 3032 West 21st St., Coney Is- land, affecting 11 men. Members of the Alteration Paint- ers Union and sympathetic workers are asked to come to the above men- tioned places and help in picketing. The strike headquarters of the strikers are Estonian House, 27 West 115th St., and 2916 W, 27th St., Coney Island. / ies Woe Local 5, Alteration Painters Union, meets every Monday, at 8 p.m., at the Estonian House, 27 W. 115th St., New York City. All painters of the neigh- borhood are invited. Tammany Tiger and NAACP Oust Negro Doctors and Segregate Nurses By BEN DAVIS The white doctor, John F. Conner, and the Negro doctor, Louis T. Wright, both offsprings of the Tam- many Tiger, still stalk the halls of the city's Harlem Hospital, sinking their surgical teeth into the bodies of Negro workers, clawing Negro doc- tors from the hospital staff, and terrorizing nurses into segregation. These “ward healers,” under the leadership of the United Colored Democracy, Tammany’s plague to Negro Harlem, present the’ united Negro and white capitalist front for the oppression of the Negro people of Harlem. Flagrant discrimination against Negro doctors, nurses and hospital workers run deuces wild in Harlem Hospital. Capable Negro doctors find themselves on the outside looking in at inexperienced white doctors who replace them. Dr. Ira A. McCowan of 1949 Seventh Avenue is one of those who were fired for denouncing the vile practices of the . (Section of the Communist International) Y 25,000 SUBS FOR THE SATURDAY EDITION! 1. Make a house to house canvass with the “Daily” and follow up all contacts that you make! . Organize house parties, make contacts and get subscribers! Get your unit, union local or branch of mass organi- zation to challenge another group in raising subs for the “Daily”! NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1933 FOOD COSTS UP ON RUMOR OF ATTACK ON USSR Early Invasion in Early Attack on U.S.S.R. By Japan JAPANESE TAKE PASS Nanking Pretends to Make Resistance U. S. wheat speculators yesterday celebrated rumors that Japan already had declared war-on’ the Soviet Union by sending up the price of wheat. The rumors originated in Wall Street. They were based on () internment by Japanese of four Soviet whaling vessels, (2) the pres- ent Japanese invasion of Jehol Prov- ince and advance toward the borders of the Mongolian Peoples Republic and the Soviet Union, (3) official an- nouncement by the spokesman of the Japanese Foreign Office of Japan’s rejection of the non-aggression pact offered by the Soviet Union in its consistent struggle for peace, and (4) Wall Street’s knowledge of, and leading participation in the plans of world imperialism for armed inter- vention against the Soviet Union, the country which is building Socialism and already has abolished unemploy- ment and race hatred and tremen- dously raised the material and cul- tural conditions of the masses, The Japanese Rengo News Agency reports a conference at Chingwang- tao yesterday between Chinese and Japanese military officers in the pres- ence of British naval officers, The conference was sponsored by the British and secretly supported by U. S. imperialists for the purpose of localizing the struggle around Shan- haikwan. This would serve to facil- itate the Japanese advance into Jehol Province and toward the borders of the Mongolian Peoples’ Republic and the Soviet Union. Japanese planes haye bombed sev- eral Chinese villages northward of Chiumenko Pass. Chinese regular troops, attacked by the Japanese north of the Great Wall, are reported offering sharp resistance. Meanwhile, Japanese troops have approached the Soviet borders in the vicinity of Vladivostok, Soviet (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) ELECTION FRAUD CASES MOUNTING Show Huge Steals of Communist Votes NEW YORK.—The- stench of election frauds and political corrup- tion disclosed during the November elections is pouring forth in increas- ing volume from every part of the country. That the chief fire of all the political parties was directed against the only party of the working class, the Communist Party was al- ready made clear in disclosures printed in the Daily Worker shortly after the elections. The discovery of a voting machine in the 4th Assembly District which registered 10 Communist votes, but was credited with no Communist votes in the official returns, is now admitted to be an example of what happened on a large scale. Even the reactionary Herald-Trib- une had to admit editorially that: “In every case the Socialist and Communist candidates, entitled to no inspectors, were robbed of most of their votes.” That there was revealed a state of affairs “for which collusion between the Democratic and the Re- publican poll inspectors is the only reasonable answer.” It is clear that the Communist vote was many times greater than the 103,799 officially recorded. dared state that “there {s manifest cause for concern as regards the fu- ture of the Negro doctor in Harlem Hospital.” Last Friday things got so raw that the president of the Wright and Con- ner-controlled Manhattan ” Medical Society, Dr. C. C. Middleton, decided to break partnership with this gang and resigned. His resignation came in on a wave of outright firings, such as that of Dr. McCowan, which had forced resignations to the tune of one @ week. Negro doctors who do not fight back are forced to accept positions at. the bottom rung of the medical ladder, halfway out the door, White doctors overcrowd the staff of the surgical department, endangering its efficiency, and swelling the payroll. White doctors employed at Harlem Hospital as high-powered associate visiting surgeons hold much lower positions at other hospitals, where there are no Negro workers to ex- on, ‘Mass Demonstration for Chinese Unionist; Consul Deserts Office HELP SAVE CHI is a mass meeting to demand Speakers will be James W. F John Ballam and Sam Nessin. . * NEW YORK.—Hundreds of work- ers demonstrated yesterday at five o'clock, in front of the Chinese Con- sulate. When the workers marched up to the door of the building at 13 Astor Place, they were informed by the police officials that the Chinese Consulate was closed. The delega- tion elected by the workers’ organi- zations then went upstairs anyway. The Consulate had been informed by wire at two o'clock that the dele- gation was coming. The Consul, fearing to meet the delegation, no- tified the police, and then fied Policemen on horse and on foot were seen on the blocks surrounding the Consulate. Speakers A-meeting was held outside the Consulate for a half hour, during which the case of Huang Ping was explained. The speakers were Pau- line Rogers, head of the delegation. representing the Trade Union Unity Council; John J. Ballam, District Organizer of the International La- bor Defense; and William Simons, National Secretary of the Anti-Im- perialist League. While the meeting went on, large numbers of workers listened from the streets as well as from the offices on Astor Place. After the demonstration, the work- ers marched along University Place to Broadway, and along 14th St. to Union Square, where another meet- ing took place. This demonstration is a step for- ward in the campaign to free Huang Ping, Paul and Gertrude Ruegg and the other victims in the Kuomintang jails. Resolution The demonstration adopted the following resolution: “We, workers of New Yor" City, assembled in front of the ( nese Consulate at 13 Astor Place, on the call of the Trade Union Unity Council, the International Labor Defense and the Anti-Imperialist League, declare our solidarity with WIN DOCTOR FOR FIAMETTI FAMILY Jobless Councils Get Relief for 30 Cases NEW YORK.—Three unemployed council branches united Wednesday to send a committee of ten with 30 cases of jobless workers denied relief hitherto, and many of them in need of medical attention. The committee went to the Home Relief Bureau at 25th Avenue and Benson and won "practically every point. Most important was the forcing of the Home Relief to plegge not to cut down the relief to the Fiametti fam- ily, whose two nine-month-old babies died of starvation a few days ago. ‘There was a proposal to stop some of the rerief because now “there are two less mouths to feed.” Not only was this cruel plan de- feated by the organized unemployed, but the Home Relief was forced to send a doctor at once, yesterday, to the Fiametti family. He advised a special diet for the remaining Fia- metti children, ana this the Heme Relief promises to get from site Bor- cugh Relief. Relief and medical care tained for the other cases. The Unemployed Couiicir branches of Bath Beach, Coney Island and Brighton Beach took part in the win- ning of the demands. was ob- Personal and political favoritism play a major part in the Tammany operations. Samuel Koenig, Repub- lican leader of New York City, who is charged now by Republicans with being a Democrat in disguise, seems to have quite a “relationship” with the Harlem Hospital, and the Tiger is known to allow only Tammanyites to meddle with its “Medical Lair.” It seems that Dr. Falk, white, chief gynecologist (woman specialist) of the hospital and also one of the chief instigators discrimination, is a brother of Attorney Falk (of Seabury fame), who in turn is a brother-in- law to Samuel Koenig. And perhaps it is merely an accident that Dr. Falk appointed his own brother-in- law, Dr. Murray H. Levine, to an associate attending surgeonship in Harlem Hospital? The jim-crow tactics come out with a bang in the hospital's dining (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) ESE UNION LEADER! NEW YORK.—Tonight at 8 p.m. at Irving Plaza Hall. | the release of Huang Ping! ‘ord, Louise Thompson, Liang, * Huang Ping, Paul and Gertrude Ruegg and the other victims of Kuomintang terror in China. Huang Ping, trade union leader and anti-imperialist, fought not only | for the Chinese masses, but for | the international working class as well. “We protest emphatically against the inhuman torture of branding CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents PROJECTIONISTS INTL ORGANIZER ENDORSES STATE CONFERENCE PLAN “Rank and File of Most Locals Hundred Per Cent for Unemployment Insurance” Workers Discuss Albany Conference and New Huang Ping with red hot irons. We (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) GIBSON CLIQUE ANSWERS JOBLESS WITH COPS’ CLUBS Evades Direct Answer'| in Words But Says | Won’t Increase Jobs BULLETIN NEW YORK. — Police Commis- sioner Mulrooney himself was at the needle trades unemployed de- monstration and gave the order for police attack. He was recognized by workers in the crowd. aE Ea NEW YORK .—“Beat it if you don't want to get hurt!” T! was the real answer of the city government to some 300 unemployed needle workers who marched to the Gibson Committee office on Fourth Avenue and 28rd St. yesterday to demand no Stagger system, no discrimination a- gainst. Negroes; and: better conditions on Gibson Committee jobs. They de- manded cash relief for single men and young workers and cash relief for those the Gibson Committee does not give work. They demanded the dismissal of the timekeeper Katz who slaps women workers in the face, at, the “S & J” shop. Inside, the Gibson Committee re- presentatlve Houston was somewhat | more evasive with the Needie Trades Unemployed Committee delegation interviewing him, but outside the po- lice gave the official answer with} clubs, Police Attack The police launched an attack on the crowd right before the Gibson Committee office. Men and women .| Were punched jn the face, their ban- ners torn down and broken over their heads. The workers fought back, they refused to be broken up though they were divided into sev- eral groups. They stayed put until the committee came out to report. Inside the building, the commit- tee’s spokesman, Hoffman, of the Needle Trades Unemployed Council, told Houston that the later was held responsible for any police attack. Although Houston at first refused to see more than four, the resolu- tion of the uner-ployed needle work- ers caused a committee of 10 to be recognized. They were immediately battered around at the entrance, but refused to be provoked. Discrimination Houston's evasions to Hoffman's direct questioning crew from the lat- ter the conslusion that “the Gibson Committee’s discrimination against Negro workers, young workers and members of the Unemvloyed Coun- cil,” was to be continued as in the past. In answer to Homan’s query if more workers were to be given jobs by Gibson's committee, Houston re- plied, “I'm afraid not,” an answer which he iater aualified so as to re- main non-committal. The first 700 applications for needle work which the Gibson com- mittee was handling, had come from the Unemployed Council, Hoffman nointed out. “Of these only 35 had been given jobs, no Negroes among them,” he said. Houston told the 19 workers that the rules of his com- mittee did not call for the supply of cash relief. “Can Be Chaneed” Hoffman then vointed out that “such rules covld be chanved if un- emploved workers were renvesented instead of the bankers and indus- trialists who now run the Gibson committee.” Returning to report the practical denial of the demands of the work- ers by the Gibson representative, the committee found that the cops had attempted to smash the assemblaze. Hoffman mounted a hydrant and de- nounced the brutality of the police, pointing to nearby worker with an ugly gash over his left eye as an example. “Boos” greeted Hoffman's report of the Gibson committee's refusal to assist the unemployed needle work- ers. As he was addressing the gath- | Trade Union Commitiee: ering, Hoffman was jerked off his stand by police and the workers were again subjected to an attack, mount- ed police riding the side walks @ far as 19th St. a York Preliminary Conference Jan, 22 NEW YORK. — Alr wide-spread discussion among workers in the labor markets, day rooms of unions, and wherever they congregate on the opening of the campaign for a state conference on unemployment and labor legislation. The conference wa Union Committee on Unem- ployment Insurance and Re- lief. The committee invited all workers’ organizations to endorse the and to participate in a New York City preliminary conference in Irving Plaza Hall, Jan. 22, at 2 p.m., to make all arrangements for the state conference. Various trade union before the union lor chance to meet and ter have called on their to back up the propesais Congratulate Committee The latest of these is International Organizer De Costa, of the Interna- tional Association of Proiectionists and Sound Engineers. He stated ye: terday to the New York’A. F. of L. for Unem- ployment Insurance and Relief. “Having just returned from a Netfonal feur in connection with affairs of ovr union and beine in- formed of the stens of your Com- mittee in preparing for a State- Wide Conference fer the nurnose of draftiny labor bills for the leeis- lature, I was hiehly gratified and want to take this opportunity to congratulate yi upon th's mest commendable initiative. Wherever I went on my recent trip I found that nr locals as well as the rank and file of mest Joes! mnions in other crafts with which I came in contact are all 10 ner cent for the movement initiated Jast Jan. 27, 1932, for unemployment insurance and relief. “We must give this movement the greatest momentum and must unite in this movement all the forces of labor. None realizes more than we do in our union to what extent the diviston that has existed in the ranks of labor is helning the hesses and is sapping the very vitals of the working people. Mo power to this work! I promise the whole hearted support of my union and myself for the noble work you have started.” The proposal of the A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for a y conference in Albany in February on the broadest scope, with representation from every sort of leaders, even have had a membership is labor union, workers’ fraternal, bene- | fit, social, etc. organizations, of all parties and creeds and languages. to actually work out specific bills from the workers’ point of view. While the conference will devote, | according to the proposal, the major attention to unemployment, it will have bills against injunctions, for factory safety and minimum hour legislation, etc. called by the New York State A. F. 0 up the mat- | Trade ——__—__ aoa 8 PLAN MASS RENT STRIKE IN BRONX: -PICKETING TODAY Waging Nine Strikes ; | Gas Companies Cut Off Workers’ Fuel | NEW YORK.—Bronx nts last night held a large meeting at’ their Unemployed Council, 1400 Boston Rd., to plan a mass strike for cheaper rents. | All yesterday the demand that landlords must reduce high rents echoed throughout the city, as thou- nds of workers supported and atched the prog’ of strikes al- {ready going on he Bronx, in | Brocklyn and on the East Side. | Tenants fighting for cheaper rents | at 1433 Charlotte St., the Bronx, urge everybody to come to their mass dem- | onstration at 10 o'clock this morn- ing. Mass picketing continued here all of yester , as well as at 1377 | and 1392 Franklin Ave. | Rent strikers 2027 Monterey Ave. |}and 1566 Washington Ave., in the | Bronx, are sticking together in their struggle against the landlords for their demands. United in Struggte Workers, artists and writers are | still united and determined in their | strike to force the landlord at 11th | St. and Avenue A to come down on | his rents and recognize their hou committee. This landlord is try |to smash the strikers’ organi | by offering to deal with them dividually.” The strikers | are refusing. He also is tr, are wi ying to torment the strikers by having the gas company |turn off the gas. The tenants are |now looking around for ways and ; means to turn it on again. This llandiord, George Rosenblum, of the |}D and R Holding Company, owns ; apartments at 418, 418% and 420 East Sixth St. The tenants there also are fon strike. They haye placed their |rent money in a joint\fund in the jbank. They will not pay it, until the | landlord comes across. Large crowds of East Side workers jand the tenants kept a mass picket jline in front of 11th and Avenue A |all day. They want a large turn-out (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) CITY EVENTS MASS MEETING TODAY TO DEMAND RELEASE OF HUANG-PING A mass protest meeting against the arrest vf Huang-Ping, head of the All-China Federztion of Unions, and to demand his immediate release from the mu.derous grip of the Nation: be held at Irvine Plaza, 15th Government, will Street and Irving Place, today, at 8 p.m., under ihe auspices of the Trade Union Unity Council, the International Labor Defense and a number of other organizations. COMMEMORATE JULIO MELLA TODAY The Anti-Imperialist League calls a mass meeting today, § p.m., at Spanish Center, 1413 Fifth Ave., cor. 116th St. to commemorate the 4th anniversary of the assassination of Julio Mella. Speakers: Moore, Leonard Sanchez and Willi: . Richard B. jam Simons. GRADUATION AFFAIR FOR ¥.C.L. STUDENTS Farewell affair and graduation for Young tional Training Schoo} students, Saturday, & p.m., in Novy Mir Club Rooms. . ommunist, League Na- 700 Bronx Park East . . BROWDER DEBATES SOULE TONIGHT Earl Browder, secretary of the Communist Party, Soule, editor of New Republic, tonight, at 8:30 p.m., will debate George at Labor Temple, 242 East 14th St., on the subject: “Is Planned Economy Possible Under Capitalism?” . MIKE GOLD DEBATES EARNEST BOYD TONIGHT Michael Gold, editor of New Masses, debates Ernest Boyd, editor of “The American Spectator,” today, at 8 p.m. at Engineering Auditorium, 25 West 39th St., on the subject: “Resolved that the Marxian approach to Literature is the correct and scientific one.” Pen and Hammer. Debate sponsored by * « PROTEST TONIGHT AGAINST TERROR IN SOUTH Carl Sklar, former Imperial Valley Prisoner, and Richard B. Moore, of LLL.D., speak at mass protest meeting tonight at 8 p.m. against Tampa Terror and for release of Scottsboro boys, Meeting is at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. near Claremont Parkway. * Ce BUILDING TRADES WORKERS DEMONSTRATION Mass demonstration and picketing Saturday, 10:30 a.m Street and Lenox Ave., Harlem Armory, at 143rd to demand back-wages for Building Trades workers and to protest racketeering and discrimination by A. F. of L, and City officials. All workers urged to come. * . . TAMPA-SCOTTSBORO MASS MEETING TODAY C Sklar, former Imperial Valley prisoner, and Richard B. Moore, of LL.D., will speak at a meeting to protest Tampa terror and demand release of Scotteboro boys, today, at 8 pm. at Ambassador Hall, Ses ed |