| Milita EMI) = Buck to speak at city rally March 7 to Hear Buck, LPP national leader, of his recent discussions Voters in the 11 i federal Friday March 7, Z ° Constituencies on the Low- the real alternative to the comes to Vancouver to ad- with government leaders | ce Mainland, who have policies of the old-line dress an election rally at in China and the USSR— 0 a reason to be weary parties which have led the Exhibition Gardens and _ the other parties to the the pretexts, postures country into economic it is expected that there policies of peace, trade and 4nd promises of Lib i i eral and Be : ity turnout friendship the LPP advo- Conservative leaders, will ‘SIS: ye eee i have an opportunity on March 7 is the day Tim to hear what he has goiter) caleg » Pacilic | LIBERAL hee 702 = IREU i \ Vol tc : FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1958 lO¢ ~ 46 No, | | Sa. A VANCOUVER, B.C. the thorisea as second class mail by eet Office Department, Ottawa penepremerrgnrnererman * Here Ti m Buck, LPP national leader and candidate in : : Peed | me ronto-Trinity is se aussie the federal election TORONTO — Refusal of Liberal and Conservative governments to come to Paign wy; ee es : : 2 ae ae nas Hochelaga with Camille Dionne, candidate in Montreal grips with the real problems affecting this country has plunged a million and a half Canadians into economic crisis, Tim Buck, national leader of the Labor-Progressive So viet in 10 nn b a cks party, charged at an election rally here last week. Speaking to a capacity audience, Buck said both parties had refused to adopt | Nuclear Pa free Zone new national policies of independent Canadian development. They had tied Canada to the U.S. economy. "ent declaring ; : : : arin ‘ 7 t i : Prong & its full support for the Polish government’s y : i 4 Ren the creation of a nuclear-free zone in Europe. “Our country is one-sidedly dependent on the U.S. Our party has fought for | “ould i ahs oe ei ce ee ei e aaa new independent policies for years to correct the situation. Although President Eisen- and m € complete abolition of atomic weapons : : : eee frgy a Ae of nuclear en- aisuio-ana Heduarenewea” hower assures the American people that March will bring the ‘beginning of the end fy] Clusively for peace- ° atomic an : ; ee 3 4 ZA fl te P08es! the sidtement _pous:” of the recession, and that by mid-summer everything will be rosy, the facts talk dif- | i 4 Us, an 1 unfortunately the The Soviet government ferently.” aan do mitish governments makes it clear that it supports i Sha 4 : wee a ° . “Th See the plan only on condiion:the Buck pointed out that U.S. production had fallen in January for the fifth con- ; EY are basing their West German government 2 Eye oe ‘ the «0% these weapons for joins with East Germany, Po- secutive month- Steel production is down to 52 percent of capacity. ) tulfilment of their politi- land and Czechoslovakia in Se Sire 3) ; : : ar “IMs,” the Soviet state- undertaking not to produce or Department store sales dropped eight percent in the first week of February. Me eM : ! pat Says, “and the Western station atomic, hydrogen or is. do not even want to rocket weapons on its terri- lake the Steps of ending tests tory. Continued on back page — See ELECTIONS