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00 3 |14 since the beginning of the drive.|y. p. Rackfor » % Blowout” dance and entertainment at vn gricul ‘ ite ye re on on Hours, which they The unevenness of the total figure is | Rame 10) H. Wither | 140 Broad St., Feb. 4. The charge is| murder squads. perienced in Germany before. | an ee receive a greater re- | Shirks P indicated in the fact that sight dis-| Sherif. 10) Anénymous 25° cents for a hat check. Working class members of the So- | .,Sttikes of dock workers againist the) Muneration. : ublic Hearing. t fail - » Dig. | Die, Mura +10) A. Taydon 7 Hitler government are reported in| The motor tractor stations are to ricts failed to send in a cent: Dis-| a. Manusbin 225 | 8. Fischer | Gig SE PS of the United States: | clalist Party . Hi =| have more responsibility in organiz~ John Meade, director of ifidustrial | tricts 4, 5, 11, 12, 13, 16, 18, 19-and| John Harrison ~ (20| L. Sharkey | q " 4 | temmburs 98 well as 6 partial stop-| ig y ah se safety of Mass., took issue with Croll 99, ‘nis ‘must be improved imme-| oman W. Burns 'Share-the-Work for Unite with the working class snd | page of street car service, ‘There are| ing the work of the collective farms, . Lars.cca? | as She exposed miserable conditions| giately! Send fund: Sem Duda Anonymous | ; the Communist Party for support of| strikes in a number of Berlin fac-| giving them technical and adminis- ’ * “ ere te eee Om NEN Rie Waeed A. Palater | Teachers D: ed | the revolutionary German masses. | trative assistance Jobless Act in Ind.,Mo., Soiteer ih Tawrnoe inal of tes Labia ack woe Chita Gitensioin 36] Keane 5) Sere | Repudtate the eteayals by the Hill. Botialit and Communist workers | Big Tncrease in Necessities . . . bhas. feastein 3 ramer ‘ P » is 8 | ea 5 Pa., and Neb. women, as an élected delegates of the | rotat received sun and Mon, .$ oge.ta| S: Altman, 36) Anonymous 8) NEW YORK.—The Board of Educ- | quits and Thomeses, the Cerman | are fighting together in many’ places) The production of good for imme- \ ’ United Front Conference called by "reviousty received o sua0.78| % pie i 4%) ation has announced the suspension | Soclal-democrat leaders ar € | against fascist attacks. | diate use will be increased 18.6 per SOUTH BEND, Ind, Jan, s1—| the National Textile Workers Union| 44, ——| AF Cineman Nelson Smith 15 Of the pauperizing Share-the-Work | Second International! ‘The first measures against the re-| cent as compared to 1932, The volume Over eight thougand workers pere | 12,that elty," she deciaréd. talevacaee dhaadsy a cantata |e ae Sam Tomehin “15| for substitute teachers. The protests | WORKERS! | volutionary movement have already | of these goods will amount to 234 domenstensed today before the county Ure ited a eed Pheer ati Chetse , DisTEICT 1 i ietvis Garieaberg 33) of teachers, parents, and educational | ‘Unite in support of the revolution- | Neatisne ao aaa ee demon- | speaiah gre et . ae eee ‘hel if 8. ? a oat " ist | ment for li somminsiotiare<: agains the: beaiket public hearing to be conducted in sea Unit = 8.00 to di $188.45, | Ida “Davidson | Sum Atman a associations were so great that the | ary struggle of the German masses strations called by the Communist ig. ttiees geod Stk id inoraabee all DAILY WORK ER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1933 BRIGGS STRIKERS CONTINUE FIGHT Grand Rapids Workers Walk Out Again ‘CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) today, these 700 men would not be able to do the work of the 10,000 that were employed at the four Briggs’ plants, While far less than 700 have ac- tually supplied for jobs, yesterday's mass picketing brought out 18 de- signers who had remained at work at the Briggs Vernor Highway plant. The picketing was cafried through despite the greatest mobilization of police in Detroit history. ‘Thousands of Highland Park (Detroit) and Dearborn cops were on hand, assisted by hundreds of state troopers who came in during the night, as well as Ford company detectives acting in conjunction with deputy sheriffs, The National Guard had also been secrét- ly mobilized and drilled in anti-strike work. The sttikers issued an appeal to the National Guardsmen to refuse to aid the bosses in driving them back to starvation. The strike committee also sent a telegram to the demo- cratic governor, Comstock, demanding the removal of the state troopers and demonstration of the National Guard. The strikers are demanding a niini- mum of 50 cents an hour for men, 45 cents for women, and up to $1 an hour, as well as the abolition of various “insurance” and other swindle schemes for some classes of | skilled workers, foisted on them by the company. The company’s offér is only 25 cénts an hour for both men and women and the elimination of “dead time.” The company has, in addition, refused to deal with the strikers’ elected negotiations cémmit- tee or to recognize their shop com- mittees, which is one of their prin- cipal demands. So far the united front of the bos- ses, Mayor Murphy, Frank X. Mar- tel, president of the Detroit Feder- ation of Labor, and the officialdom |Plan Stone Memorial | for Anniversary of Harry Simms’ Death SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Jan. 30,—In | prepating for the first memorial an-| niversary for Harry Simms who died a victim of boss terror in the strug- gle of the Kentucky mines, the Young Communist League of this city has initiated a fund for the erec- | tion of a monument at his grave. Appealing for contributions for! this purpose, the Harry Simms Me-| morial Conference declares in part:| “Although in our daily struggles the} Most fitting monument to his mem-| ory is being built, yet as a symbol of; our solidarity in the struggle,in which | he was murdered, let us erect a stone) memorial upon his grave.” Contributions should be sent to the treasurer of the local Conference, M.| Shour, 67 Bond Street, Springfield, | Mass. or the Young Communist League, 50 E, 13th 8t., N. ¥. C. | WORKERS EXPOS ‘Closed’ Boston Meet gates of the Lawrence United Front Labor Conference for Unemployment | Insurance and Labor Legislation, and the Unemployed Councils broke thru) | the Secret sessions arranged by Goy-| ernor Ely in Boston, Friday, de- nounced his attacks on the workers of | the State and left a program of de-| mands worked out through the joint! action of the workers. { The délegate of the Lawrence con-| ference was June Croll and of the Unemployed Councils Anna Bloch. Coming to Ely’s closed conference they found governors and represen-| tatives from 13 states including New York, Penn. New Jersey, the New England States, and a representative | of the State Department of Labor NEW YORK, BOSTON BATTLE FOR FIRST PLACE; OTHER “ERMAN MASSES DISTRICTS ARE FAR BEHIND | Nine Districts Fail to Contribute on Monday; Cleveland, New Jersey and California Low; Need to Push Collections Total donations to the Daily | Worker drive during the sec- ond half of last week (Friday | to Monday inclusive) amount-| ed to $1,004.62, almost doub-| ling the total amount received dur-| ing the previous half week. | Mainly responsible for this advance which nevertheless falls far short of the minimum contributions needed | if the Daily Worker is to retain even | the thread of security which it now) |has—was the showing of New York, | ELY CONFERENCE vt is responsible for $754.49 of | | the money raised. Besides raising | the total for the half-week, this com-| iggy, parative spurt enabled New York to! Force Admission Into | booe’ its percentage to 17.2 and re- | gain first place from District 1 (Bos- ton). District 15 (Connecticut) made | OSTON, Mass. Jan. 31—! . | the biggest spurt of all, jumping from | he vt Dele’ |5 to 11.7 per cent and landing in third | place. Boston workers are expected to fight hard to keep first place in order to maintain their record of the last financial drive when the Boston dis- trict finished first in the percentage | of its quota fulfilled. With the drive well into its third | week, Chicago still remains the black sheep of the campaign. With) a quota of $4,000, its failure to raise more than $28.55 to date is inexcus- lable. We are still giving Chicago the benefit of the doubt, hoping that this slow start will be made up for in the next week or so. Snap into it, Chi- cago! You can’t afford to fail! hate | Yes, it’s dangerous going these days for the Daily Worker, No class-conscious worker should need a “Danger!” sign to know this. | Only a widespread immediate re- sponse to our appeal for funds will keep the “Daily” above water! Rush your contribution NOW! | DISTRICT 2 Ben B | Yeor City Com. 10.00] A™szmen® ¥ | Grassman, Apple- | Riche 10 | baum’s boarding | | Chernin 35 | _ house i 0 sae -25) Anonymous A. Bernstein - 10.00 Lonax 9.00! i john De | Collected by Section | Group of Shoe | 35, Unit 26: | Workers $10! Buck Jones 05 2.00 | : | Mina Eskanz 2.00) J. Machlis 05} 20 Unit 6-10 1,00 Mas 05, 10 210 210 J. Wolenchuk Collected La Mai 05 05 ic | Geo. Bhanpelo | Collected by Unit 1 Section 2: | John Daylis 05, Max Egath 95) Vretor 05 Kass -9 | Geo. V. Partozides 10 Litman -95| Julius Hayma 205, | Fishein +5 Jos. Combers 05 Pelkowity +95) Lois Kanoanr 10 | Kistibein +05 | Steretfe 205 Dagavarian 85) Maurice Sugar 5.00 | A, Damurgian = .05/ DM. Soluski 5.00 M. Nurey 10) Finnish Workers’ M. Xx. Women’s Club 5.00 | Anonymous ‘Unit 1, See. 2 | Anonymous $179.80 Anonymous DISTRICT 8 | Anonymous . Thomas 1.00 | Gerber ployed Coun- | Byman le. 4. | Shapiré | Rowe Bradley | Elmwood Pk, |B. Toplan L. Romas 10. Appleton 1.00) P. J. Nebjan 20) Louis Hockheim Levin As 1 Pett 0 Total $12.94 Bernice 15) TH, to date $26.55 Chas, Norman DISTRICT 9 Ii. Lerner rvid I. Salonen, | DH. Lawrence 25 Collection 3.00 | Collected by Unit 4,| Duluth Section 2.50 Section 2: | James Rallis ostas Katris Share of Lenin Me- | mortal Proceeds Total 5.50 Til. to date $22.05 DISTRICT 10 | Ralph C. Max 1.00 Ttl to date $4.50 DISTRICT 14 Total 68 ‘Tt to date $1,920.05 | Perey Quick 1.00 | DISTRICT 3 E, Pearson 1.00 F. Meliman, | K. Rampe 1.00 | collection Total ‘SUPPORT FIGHT OF Statement of CC. Communist Party,USA — YROM PAGE ONE) pee | italism and Wall Street imperialism. | Hitler is a sworn enemy of the | Soviet Union. His program is one for unity of German Fascistn, French >| imperialism and Améfi¢an imperial- | lism for a military attack upon the | Soviet Union. Hitlerism is anti-Semitic, Po- | groms against the Jewish people have | already been latinched in Germany. | Hitlerism is directed against the working class, the toiling farmers, against the Soviet Union, and as the first move toward bloody violence against the working clase, the Ger- | man capitalists, thru Hitler, and with the aid of the Social Democratic | leaders, plans to suppress the Com- |munist Party, which hes shown it~ | self the one and only party in Ger- |many that would lead the working masses against Fascism, | WORKERS! | Fascism could not have come to) power without the aid of the Social- | Democratic Party leaders and the social-demovratic leaders in the trade unions. The bureaucracy of the Social-De- | mocracy, the German colleagues of | [the American Socialist Party, has | brought Fascism to power through | deluding sections of the working- class with its policy of “the lesser | evil.” Then the Hindenburg-Von Papen dictatorship was the lesser levil. Next the Hindenburg-Von | Schleicher dictatorship was the les- | ser evil. | The German _ Social-Democrat (leaders disrupted the unity of the | working-class, held sections of it back from struggle, permitted work- $3.00 | ers conditions to be driven ever lower, | Page Three International Notes By ROBERT HAMILTON THE FINAL EFFORT OF THE GERMAN BOURGEOISIE—HITLER The composition of the new Hitler cabinet just appointed by President von Hindenburg in Germany indi- cates that this represents a govern- | power in the face of the insuperable | conflicts of the present crisis. Only been left outside—the German So- cialist leaders, | Von Papen and Hugenberg repre- sent big business and the industrial- ists of heavy industry. The latter, the German Hearst also controls the German film industry—Ufa—as well as a large portion of the newspapers of the country. The fuedal agrarians are also rep- resented in the persons of Count von Krosig and Baron von Neurath. Seld- te represents the reactionary war vet- erans’ organization, the Stalhelm. The Hitlerites come into the Cabinet with Goering, Frick, and Hitler him- self. This united bourgeois cabinet will doubtiess endeavor to suppress the | German Communist Party, throwing its 100 deputies out of the Reichstag. But this will not be the first time that the Communist Party has gone underground in Germany. Its pres- THE SWORDSWALLOWER | | | | ment of bourgeois national concen- | | tration—the final united effort of the | German capitalist class to cling to) one wing of the bourgeois front has | USSR. PAY RAISE OF 93 P.C. IN 1933 |Toilers Delegates Soviet Unanimous for Gov’t Plan | By N. BUCHWALD. in (European Correspondent, Daily } Worker.) | MOSCOW, Jan. 31. — The Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union closed its sessions yesterday after the | adoption of the economic plan for 1938, the firs: year of the Second Five-Year Plan. The budget for this year provides for an income of 35 billion Tubles, with expenditures at 33.2 bil- tubles, leaving a surplus of ly two billion rubles. Increase Production 16.5%. The total increase in industrial uction for the year is set at 16.5 nt over 1932. Increased capital ments are provided for all in- dustries and agriculture. The plan provides for production of 84.2 million tons of coal; 24.4 million | tons of ofl; 9 million tons of iron and an equal quantity of steel. The tex- tile industry is scheduled to produce 2.75 billion meters of cotton cloth; the shoe industry to give 815 million pairs of leather footwear besides many million pairs of rubber foot- wear. Production in the food indus- ry will amount to 7.7 billion rubles xecording to the prices of 1926-27. Will Raise Wages. An important feature of the Second Five Year Plan is the provision for a decrease in production costs of all Commissioners. Other districts continue to offset | F; Rothhard 30) FH. Sack 10) Tel. to date Tt. to date $14.24! joined the capitalist és in thelr | of the LW.W., Socialist Party, S0-| “yor some time Governor Fly has| the achievements of the few that | George on 4.00] 0° Novioxt a) besratcr’¢ DIsTRICT 1 evar a he pect Pasty, | industries. This decrease, however, is cialist Labor Party and Proletarian ‘ | tiean You! | Buchater 1@| 3. Fromholtz 18. pringtield, Mass. | not to be realized at the expense of Party has failed to. weaken the iro: been conducting a campaign for a| are actually buckling down to work. | Club 14.00) stobank 1G) Tt. to date 363. Wkrs. of Spring- took the lead in attacking the Soviet | the workers, On the contrary, wages y eaken the iron | “moratorium” on the State Labor) New Jersey, with only 1.4 per cent | Joe Krupp 1.00! Carmella 0% DISTRICT 7 field, Mass. 50.00) Union. | i ; 1 ' unity of the strikers. The militant és |. Appel 10.00 | } | during 1933 will be further raised in laws, in the effort to bring working| of its quota achieved; California, | | Grane Baber = bpd —— 7 i ‘There is i ’ Auto Workers Union has the full | i 1 gs Old Peoples Homé: | Abraham Bo} 1.00; Tt. to date $05.75, Today Hitler is in power. ere IS | all branches of socialist economy, piiscalst hetapiatalorscier ad Vg deed standards down to the level pfevail-| with only .5 per cent and Cleve- | soe winter 1.00 | i ye ‘ 300, prarnicT 17 open Fascism in Germany. The ‘With: ait avethge dncfeabe ei Onin @ statement to the Ford workers, | torent exrriag Mip-an the pletest for| far tailed ra nes fats th deal hoe dar leekeese \ 1,00| Anonymous 1.00/ main drive is against the Commun-— to 9.3 per cent. Increased productiv~ 4 ON ar awaken e danger | 4° wpe oe | | re hi rking class ity of labor is provi fe 1 calling on them to organize for A. Buélirin lb : | ist Party and the wo 4 | t? gL a ; y of s provided for in all in struggle and to demand fa pay for heading the wage-cutting and speed-| and to organize collections properly. | nruno Wit S| A Armeth ‘ts, Hammstrach 1.001 Le cbeneta cette $209! which gave it 6,000,000 voles in re-| Without batting an eyelash——t | Gustry and in agriculture. the period duri ich ¢ ‘| up drive of the Massachusetts téx-| Philadelphia, from which much | Geo, Bader Robert Nash 00! Polish Chamber of | cent elections. The total sowing area in 1933 wil! sp luring which they have) tile barons. wi id still ii |. | C. Keishraat Bate “30| | Labor No.¥ 2.001 4 . ses are already working illegally in S ? been locked out by the Ford Gi as and still is expected, has ful- | | 7M to tate $1 dee of ; be 133.5 million hectares. The yield y lom- “Perkins Presides. filled only 5 per cet of its quota. August Ulroh | Sserma he} 2 Fascism is in power fend many places and the Party's organi- f ring baa ears Acting as chairman in response to| Gontect, contribute funds! Hold &. Bitter B. Sweril “i0| ; the, frosalery of the fete Demme] cation. suliclently, well-kntt to t5 Ser" dont with even larger, iN- Demand Release of Jalled Piekets | T'S invitation for this anti-labor | gances parties, benetit performances, | M., Ryans ae American Youth Club rat \eaders: But Social-Democrat | weather the storm of illegality. icedten. foe. biher e@risuivart Ghee MASSILLON, O- Jon. 21. "The | conference was Prancis Perkins, N. ¥.| Chins bi a te | orman eS, | Frans Paul Fair 3 Pled to T Workers and Communist workers are| In 1924 the Party was suppressed, ducts. ‘The total in production an » 0. . 31.— The | industrial commissioner, and now|*!faits of all kinds for the Daily!/#. a D. Bohare “10 | ges to Top Quota sisting side by side in the streets | put came out of illegality much, much re grain pi mn ee nests oa here hs / siated as meinber in the cabinet of |A%4 Tush all funds in immediately! | Jack Fallon +] em ere ae against the Fascist murder squads | stronger than before. A party with |‘ Hee 1s 606 at O09 milion conta sent a telegram to Mayor Murphy | tne °" democratic. Presidentee rect, es Sue 4 tnteanb = 19) NEW YORK.—The stirring showing and police. 6,000,000 voters behind it cannot be) ‘# centner is approximately 110.25 of Detroit, protesting the terror | roosevelt, eon : * S| ML. Snyder 1.00 two Of the Daily Worker movie, “The| woRKERS! snuffed out like a candle, or driven | Pounds). against the Briggs strikers and de- Attempts were made to oust both} 4% Sy é a | eae ae tele -2| Struggle for Bread,” and a lecture The most solemn duty of inter-| into ® hole like a rat, The impend-| Strengthen Collective Farms. | | Dub fearing a startliig exposure of | ld pe f 2g |W. Shuster | Bhert ess” capped a successful evening at | j. °° 4. 4 munist Party is but one more indica- iti ‘ day's mass picketing, including their | tne antl-lapor dharaetee ef ihe Gout pee 3 2 £8 | 8. F Rio jOhss. Kosice “s0/the American Youth Club, 407 Rock- | the American ee oar tion of just how close Germany is to| % the USSR. is the adoption of a leader, the Bulgarian worker, K. D.) gerence the officials present failed t0| 1 a oe ER Ab me Fore ad |Jeck Warner 1, away Ave. Brooklyn. Of its $125 | 38,0ne man tiie edt! | the final reckoning of the German | Measure concerning the strengthen~ Misheff. (Boston) 188% | Fs | Hérshkewitz | | toiling magsés in tl ist ith the syst AR ing of the collective farms, improv- ee igh sp go through with this move. But,) 2x. ¥) 055 17.2% | N | Cohen guota, the club has already -raised lead i the A. F. of | Workers with the system of capitalist ing their administration, technical Hayes Men Walk Out Agai: later on, both of the workers’ spokes-| *~(Phila) : iF Schnelder | $44. It is preparing a series of events|_ B 8 eee ee ade, at tha | Cxbuoltation ‘ cal GraND — 105 idisn, en ra men atid the press reporters were| ‘—(Butfaloy 20.85 500 5.9% | G. Gonzales 35! warper |for the benefit of the Daily Worker, | L- ‘Of the Socialist Party of the | ier ee | equipment and labor productivity. _nttes having been tricked By" the | asked to leave when the real “busi | Pam say : Sinat,Goneaes’ 40|S Dare 83] including debates, dances and dis-| U: S- Will try to prevent this. | | All Sts agencies, lke Covet, agri company into’ going back to work, | nes” of the conference began, (Der) i | Soke Bermarde’ 35 | Saettneta “s| cussions to be held within the next| The leaders of the American s- HITLER MET By ee at, if | & (Chicago) 1% | Oollected by Unit 19! Kantor ‘x0! few \cislist Party, by their sabotage of ons, etc., are to be mobilized for the. 450 t the Perkins attempted to man | few weeks. ais iy» by ge the: strikers. at Hayes Body pl maneuver out) _9—(atinn.) he $e inst - the Spring sowing campaign, thus as- plahé here walked out again and | of the difficult situation by at first | io—iK. ©) ‘Te members of the American | the eee Pet tert Bre rane suring the collective and State farms voted against the settlement offered | allowing the labor delegates to re- I!~(N.D.48.D.) 40? | Sylvia a | Benkor Youth Club have pledged not only to | Vege cuts End tet ee on the MANY STRIKES an adequate supply of agricultural by the company and for the strike | main, but prevented them from |43— (Gaur) 3% | etnies Le ae gy) Tuflll, but to exceed their quota, and | Communist leadership of the Boviet machinery, experts, and proper or- eo grog The a ake been ae a hee aT a rei hed ree eaten i te] B. Proger A. Schaffer “sa to oe oe Gc ta aan on behalf Gaion by their support of the re-| C ita are 8 t ganization of the sowing. i soon mi - ‘onn, % K ‘38 | ib 1, S y 8% |e year. Other clubs in New York adopted to counteract the damaging | Vi(Ala. & Fla) 1.00 | M. Schwart Marsh 19 fs ican Federation of Labor, and their ; ¢ $4.3 0 ‘ore | , i | Whee river x0! he same traitorous path < | is et their struggle. Despite a strikebreak- | ‘The attempt to ignore Crol] also|!. W. 0 20.0 3.89 | Mary Chesne- Weber a0) ; Prd ede lh 80 . | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)! which have penetrated the collectives. ing injunction issued by the court, yea ake ghee? fg ge | “Donations for Sunday and Mohday |r ovens Fates e Seamen’s Club Affair ra yy Se a ea’ Banal ———___—__— | The income of the agricultural work- picketing of the plant is continuing. but won't be when the textile workers | totalled $636.46, which is an improve- | —— Gold » for ‘The Daily Worker’, Democratic ieaders murdered Liebk- repressive measures against | ers will be regulated with a view to The Auto Workers Union is active}; | Mt 5 Freudenb: a ri participating in the struggle and tive of Lawrence strike against night) Met over previous days, but not P. iteget L. Sebwarte 10} Hecht and Luxembourg, the leaders }the Communist 2arty whereby | repeal ay ot ay eee ing guidance to the strike committee, | work for women.” enough. New Jersey (District 14),| sennelder -50/ L. Palle ‘ NEW YORK.—For the benefit of of the revolution—in 1933 they try it is intended as these p: 5 | echedule fi a toultural e. ’ "| ‘This statement resulted in the offer| With only $3, continues to lag far) €. ghapice | ots) Nene ine 30\the Daily Worker, the International | to turn the entire German working {1 IS, f Me ene eee te | eee a trial ein bb Satcetiane | behind, with a total percentage of | Csllected by Unit 21,/ F. Elselbere \ Seamen's Club is giving “A Real| class over to the capitalist-junker, | Say: “To proceed on a scale and with} Gradations in pay w introduce: 8,000 DEMAND system of relief. This was the largest that Oroll and Bloch attend the) Lawrence to prove her statements Section 15: H. arklin | H. Hauser Merlo Board simply had to yield. The vic- the robber class and its Fascist | headed by the Communist Party! such severity as has never been ex- Party have been outlawed. Today’s| so that the highest skilled workers f 3 that women worked 55 hours a week Si #. Formin D'Andrea tory is another tribute to the power| Reply with comradely understand. | !ssue of the Rote Fahne (central or-| per cent as compared to last year. dignonatratibin ee a ae ; and, in the mills, that some received as INSUR. ANCE CORPS | 3, Batmstetn Amma of mass pressure. But the fight is | ing oy ee Br catidarity to | #an of the Germen Communist Par-| ‘The Soviet universities will gradue as, follower ol vic-| jow as $3 to $4 a week, and in many A 1e | Greinbetn Fanaldl | not yet over. The Board is consid- | the appeal of the German Commun- | ty) and other Communist dailies) ate during 1932 over 60,000 students, teed its pent hey a, food,| instances were forced to get up at| ond pieced ering other plans for hiring more | jst Party to the Working class .thru- | have been confiscated. the technical schools 226,000 and the ater i ae 4's. m, to care for the families »- YIELD T0 F ARMERS | padi E, Gotdstein teachers with no additional increase | out the world: Many Collisions. factory schools aver 500,000, "The to- onstration, twenty workers were ar-| the publie hearing challeng “be bea Tin Merkte xia | fa sas brrcvige ie the batt and) «tn particular the Communist Par-/ ‘here were demonstrations and! education in the Soviet schools of all rested. Then the police attacked and ily . ERIE, 9 | Revith Hollywood Stual : bei py Thal, bc age bed |ty of Germany calls for protest de- | numerous bloody collisions between | trnes is about forty-nine million, raided the Unemployed Council hall Migoh Bheaes for Tebieee, Action Shows Co.’s Bad | tity Ross | Csgchostavak Ppointments at full salaries. Fur-| monstrations, factory resolutions and | Workers and fascist “storm troops,” | While Boss Crisis Grows, on Chapin 8t. South Bend workers are indignant over this smashing of the demonstra- tion and are arranging big protest | meetings, sending delegations pro testing to Mayor Hinkle and carry- ing on great activity among the un- employed workers. Action for Filipino Independence Begun In New York City NEW YORK. ~— United Action of Americans and Filipinos for the cause of real Filipino indenendence was ber gun in New York, Friday night at a mass meeting in Stuyvesant Casino. ‘The newly organized Filipino Anti- Imperialist League called the meet- ing. M. Manzon, educational director of tho league, analyzed the so-called in- dependence bill and showed how it in reality would enslave the workers and peasants and even after ten years would not give them their in- dependence, Other speakers were: H. M. Wicks, of the Daily Worker staff, William Simmons, national sec- retary, Anti-Imperialist League, M. Publico, M. Abulance, vice-secretary, and R. Turncinda, president, \ News Flash JUDGE TURNS DOWN WRIGHT APPRAL BIRMINGHAM, ‘Ala, — Judge John P. McCoy refused to grant a transfer of Roy Wright's case, to the juvenile courts or to grant him i ‘Was con’ by the Scottsboro lynch jary when he was admittedly under age. Irving eh anes made I notifications of 4 Speaking after Croll, Anna Bloch, who is now under $1,000 bond by the | immigration authorities for activities in the National Hunger March ex- posed forced labor conditions under which the unemployed are forced to) work for private employers in return | for miserable’ and inadequate relief.) She laid the basis for the presenta- | tion of demands for the unemployed. | The delegates warned against Ely’s | statement in the opening speech at the conference, when he stated that his proposal for the “moraterium” on labor laws was made “in a moment of desperation .... @ suggestion I do not now uphold.” Sighting this retreat on the part of Ely as most significant of the ef- fectiveness of mass pressure devel- oped by united labor action, the workers’ representatives, nevertheless, warned the workers not to be thrown off guard by Ely’s declaration and to intensify the fight for the demands which they left with the officials, United Labor Demands, The demands presented by Croll and Bloch in behalf of the United Front labor conference include the following: 1—Unemployment insurance and immediate relief in the form of $50 ¢ash payment for each unemployed and $10 additional for each depend- ent. 2—Reduction of hours of labor— without reduction in pay. Against any share-the-work schemes. 3.--Against forced labor—that tt should be made tnlawful to require bre pride workers to work in re- turn for “rellef” on public or private projects. Instead, union wages to be paid for all work done. 4—Against Bly’s for the abolition of the women’s night work law and the Child Labor Law. Strict enforcement of this law, and main- tenance provisions by the State for all children in need. ¢ 5.—Abolition of the injunction law. Financial State DES MOINES, Iowa, Jan, 31.— Following the lead of the New York | Life Insurance Company, five more! x. ar: companies—the Aetna, Mutual, necticut General Life Insurance Com- panies—yesterday announced that they would not push foreclosure sales in Towa against farmers unable to pay interest on mortgages. The New- atk, Prudential Insurance Company announced suspension of all fore- closures in the United States and Canada, affecting 37,000 farmers. This action is a direct result of the growing militancy of the farmers throughout the West, who have or- ganized to resist by mass action all forced sales. At the same time it is an indica- tion of the precarious condition of these companies—and the threat im- plicit to their policyholders—inas- much as farm mortgages have long been considered “gilt edge” securi- ties, and the action of the insurance companies indicates clearly that they have little hope of ever getting more than a slight part returned on their loans to the farmers. More than $600,000,000 is involved in the mortgages upon which the companies have decided to suspend foreclosure actions, NEW. BUILDING TRADES WORK- ERS CENTER OPENS THIS WEEK ON 10TH ST. NEW YORK—The new Building Trades Workers Center will open this week at 79 E. 10th St., on the first floor. The old address is 80 E. 11th St. Carpenters and painters are urged to report to the new center as soon as possible to help fix up the place. The new center will be a conven- ient place for meetings of verlous building trades groups, Connecticut Phoenix Mutual and Con-| 7! | hey had to cut wood, for a one- | Tda Joselewitz sin Benkfest ally Wemer | Mary Gorelick LA. Te AL Al | Br ON x Women’s Council Br. No. 20 10.00 Rod: \t Ke R. Orber | Weiner 1.50 Fennerman | Fennerbaum 10,00 Belsky 50 |B. 8.00: Sam Sarlat Chit 3-B 25.00 Rubin oOre Anonymous +10| Anton Seibel By | ther details as to the progress of the battle will appear shortly in the 9.4) Daily Worker. | ROOSEVELT TO NAME CABINET WARM SPRINGS, Ga., Jan. 31.— Owen D. Young, who won fame as the 0 | defender of Morgan's banking inter- lests in Europe through the “Young | Platt,” Francis Perkins of New York | and Senator Glass of Virginia figured jamong the many names of bankers, officials and wealthy employers indi- ‘ag | Cated as possible nominees for Roose- velts Cabinet. SAME FOOD EVERY DAY IN “NICE SURROUNDINGS” BROOKLYN.—Back in Brooklyn after two months in a camp in West- chester County, where wotkers are exploited to the limit. Reading an ad in the American, “Two carpenters wanted on a gehtleman’s estate, small wages, but nice surroundings.” Accepting this job, this is what we found. There were 20 workers, and they lived and ate in an old garage with broken doors and leaky roof. We arrived just after they had built bunks. Up till then they had slept on broken down army cots. Getting @ mattress cover, I was to go to the chicken coop for straw and any~ one knows what I collected most of. The workers received $10 a month. Seeing the conditions, we kicked, and the result was we got $10 a week. So, fellow-workers, unite and kick like hell. So on Thanksgiving he cut the monthly salaries out. ‘ WORKER CORRESPONDENCE third share. He knew there was no market for wood, but he wanted the land cleared to make a nursery, He was not interested in salaries. Now the land is cleared, and with it he has 15 cords. of wood. The workers got nothing but so-called room and board, Here is the menu for the week and month: Hot cakes and coffee for breakfast. Soup for dinner, More soup for supper, a bit thicker. On Christmas Eve we had a change— fried potatoes with cabbage. This parasite owns an $80,000 Tudor apartment in New York. Having built a log cabin for him on this land worth between $10,000 and $15,000, I am back in the streets of Brooklyn. Fellow-workers, they are stepping on us. Shall we let them go further? No, join the Trade Union Unity League and the Unemployed Coun- cils, and show this damned capitalist class our way out of our misery. Member of Bond St. | the declarations of fraterna] sym- | | pathy in the press of the brother | | parties with the German working class under the leadership of the | Communist Party.” Rally to the aid of the German working class in ite revolutionary | battles against the Fascist govern- |ment of German capitalism ard junkerdom backed by Wall Street and its government! The struggle against Gernian Fas- cism is a fight against imperialist war, it is a fight against the war program of Wall Street government which today condemns millions of American workers and their depend- ents to unemployment, hunger and starvation. The heroic struggles of the German masses, headed by their Communist Party, is the central point of the world struggle for the over- throw of capitalism and the victory of the working class, the tolling farmers, the doubly oppressed Negro masses and all colonial peoples. Organize the class battle front in the United States against the cap- italist offensive. Support the Ger- man working class against the Hit- ler government of Fascism, bloody suppression of the masses and im- Perialist war! CENTRAL COMMITTEE PLEDGE THEIR FULL SUPPORT class-war _ prisoners orga’ this week. COMMUNIST PARTY OF U.S.A. FURRIER WORKE! JOIN ILD. NEW YORK.—Several hundred furrier workers pledged their support of the International Labor Defense campaign to defend and liberate by becoming | members of a newly organized branch | of the International Labor Defense, today voy Harry sipoleky, ncn ‘amy * is er ‘This new Dranch was or- supported by the police. Following} the torehlight parade before fierce | struggles took place in many districts. | burg, in which scores of shots were the notorious fascist storm detach- ment Number thiriy-three were killed and many others wounded, In Juedenstrasse, fascists in a raid on ‘Jewish quarters shot down two young Communists. One is expected | to die. Police arrested over a hun-| dred here—mostiy workers. | In demonstrations against Hitler} in working class districts, the police | attacked the workers in Neukoelln, | ‘Wedding, Buelowplatz and other dis-| tricts. There were scores of minor) battles. In the working class cities of the| provinces there were also many dem-| onstrations and struggles. Several| struggles took place in Halle, Mann- heim, Duesseldorf, Konigsberg, Ham-| burg and Dresden. | In Breslau three fascists were in-| jured. The police fired upon the workers and killed one, wounding | others, } In a pitched batile in Chariotten- | fired, a policeman and the leader ot) While stressing increased labor productivity, mastering of the tech- nique of the factories already built, the plan for the first year of the second Five Yoar Plan provides for further enormous increases in all branches of Socialist economy, an@ further improvement of the mater- ial and cultural conditions of the toiling maSses, precisely at the time when the capitalist world is sinking deeper into decay with increasing attacks on the living standards an@ cultural conditions of the toiling masses in the capitalist countries, Toilers Approve Plan, The members of the Central Exée- utive Committee of the U.8S.S.R, gave enthusiastic, unanimous approval te the entire program of the Soviet Government for 1933. The session of the Committee represented a cross section of the best elements of work- ers and peasants from all parts of the country, assuring the mobilization’ of the entire toiling population around the tasks of the Second Five Year | Plan, under the leadership of the Communist Party headed by Comrade Stalin, tenance. I contribute 8...... Address a mighty weapon in the day-to-day struggles of the working class and wish to contribute to its main- Wire, air Mail, rush funds to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St., New York City, I recognize the necessity of the Daily Worker as .. to the Daily Worker Fund.