ee Fred Wright Vo te hacks Allende, rightist plot fails Chile’ Position combined right-wing jailed in its attempt rity entiin eee election ma- k ond It to scuttle the am ‘© Nationalization pro- bout 4107 € Was elected, to Seats’ and gave him six eDUtieg ee the Chamber of ile ¢ Wo in the Sen Oppe 4 = hard-fought thine | ve ©-monopol - le to ie admittedly estas: Ons wil saueat Socialist solu- Culties “OMtinue to meet dif- issn Neither the international mo- nopolies, such as nationalized Kennecott Copper, nor the for- mer privileged section of the population show any intention of conceding defeat. But their failure. to sway a_ Significant number of workers and peasants in ther all-sided campaign gives promise of new advances on the road to Chilean socialism. In view of opposition spokes- man, former president Frei’s statement that “Allende’s Gov- ernment had better modify itself because the majority of Chil- eans have expressed dissatisfac- tion,” observers can look for- ward with interest to a Popular Unity assessment of the stun- ning set-back for the rightists. Holds U.S. to word of Jan. 27 accords By JIM LEECH External Affairs Minister Mitchell Sharp told the Commons March 5 that his Government stood by the disruptive threat made by him in Paris to pull Canadians out of the International Commission of Control and Super- vision overseeing the ceasefire. He continued to berate the Confer- ence of a week ago, which rejected Canada’s attempt to cover up US.- Thieu violations of the Agreement with demands for dispersing responsibility. In Parliament, Tory foreign affairs critic Claude Wagner quickly out- distanced Mr. Sharp, condemning Can- ada’s entry into the ICCS without first having the rules stacked beforehand. The House of Commons drama served to recall the host of provocative events. during the period of the Paris meeting — the meeting whose nine-point docu- ment Mr. Sharp disapproves. 1 The document issued by th \ 13-party International Confer- ence on Vietnam, Feb. 27-March: 2, is an Act around which its signatories, and those who sign- ed the Vietnam Peace Agree- ment on Jarl. 27 will be held to their commitments. . The drafting of the Act effec- etively re-stated U.S. responsi- bility; not only for the large- scale ruination of lives and ma- terial things in Vietnam, but for reparations to the Vietnamese people, and for control of the puppet Thieu, heavily armed by the U.S. just days before the ceasefire. These points were re-emphas- ized, not by spelling them out in handing over American pilots. tas 1, 2Gian e Unde; to 19 r Canaq a Xu the U. Wy be Possible y , Woul, d te tera, WNdreds States jp ttictions ANY other @ede will Nation, be INvestme Ih from Our 49 CanagigneMufact Co NS Were For a ENt op T8anizeg Telatie ‘uth has labor in’ Canada the mom: ~.on the Auto Pact, or any 0 Unite ship Wins ne with respect to its U.S. demand, help the situation. Sates Te eed labor’ in the The answer lies in berg? With hund, AFL- CIO and its affiliated for Canadian deliv Suppo Canada ee of thousands of mem- clusive dependence upor Officer tS of 1 the initiators and staunch and markets, and for 1 ' Can and spoke Protectionist policies. The developm | i lon senda are ce: of U.S.-based unions particular attention to the F men, verd ut erefore confronted with a ly independent countries. | ingtyyt their ae unavoidable re-assess- The road to progress li h para, itional refusal to give mean- democratic and peop / monopoly poli bar ade. ie “tity, ate Sononia recognition of Canada’s IC, social and political iden- A. Sup Port \ Mean 3 for : | Polieg SUPPort peresident Dose the gon 8 the By >, Protectioni islati Rinke €ctionist legislation such Congresg < Hartke bill now perore the U.S. - Sh Sateen Nadi, cud this bill become law, almost _ lies. Such a policy aims to make the working class bear the burden of state-monopoly capi- talist economic and social p the working people are not responsible. Against such a policy a program of strug- ntial to win economic indepen- dence for Canada and to protect and advance the democratic rights an mene’ ene would be limited to quo- fron, C@Madian € average quantity of the ™ 1965 ace imported by the U.S. ui} Prese nufacty ed nUU.S. law, products partially t a the U.S. may be sent up to . ished and then returned to “a a for sale. That would not elect! hundred er the Burke-Hartke bill. Tonics, eens of dollars’ trade in at ‘se parts, and other goods ineeeeme: 3 °S¢ hung ws that Canada could stand to Of thousands of jobs. Unila- Imposed by the United affect Canada more than Cause of its huge amount i. Genes here. USS. ownership oso lan manufacturing in- a % in the past six years. Ting industry alone, 551,000 PARE for U.S.-controlled ae and the number has in- Nixon’s peewee Policies of U.S. mono- Sarah S unilateral power to im- - *°rporate will on other coun- Burke-Hartke a peril tries, including Canada. He wants other coun- tries to pay the bills accumulated by the United States and its profit-hungry monopo- workers. policies Canada. gle is now esse The chief instrument of mobilization for such a struggle has to sovereign Canadian tra movement firmly unite and cooperation with whether socialist or capitalis working-class internationalism, united on a firm class basis. Concessions to corporatio’ Canada, at the working class taxpayers’ ex- pense, will not help i U.S. domestic: internati (DISC), or any other su ure. The experience wi poration has shown tha ent and diversification of trade, with cies and aims, an anti-mono- poly alliance that can defeat monopoly and open the future tion of our socie Central Executive Committee, the The Communist Party of Canada oS, a Brian olicies for which government cation. d needs of Canadian de union movement; a d in fraternal solidarity labor of all nations, t, on the basis of a movement date said. ns operating in in the battle against the onal sales corporation ch protectionist meas- th Michelin Tire Cor- t. Nor will surrender ther outrageous firm policies of struggle erance from the almost ex- n United States capital ndependent economic Socialist and new- ies in firm labor, les’ unity against state- to fundamental transforma- ty and a socialist future for charged, DRV and U.S. representatives in Hanoi during the procedure for Mossop, candidate in the Toronto St George provincial by-election, . this week accused the Davis Ontario of “strangling” Metro Toronto edu- “It is becoming clearer day by day,” Mr. Mossop said in a statement, “that the Davis gov- ernment is doing nothing less ; than strangling the educational ie ae be an independent and system in Metropolitan Toronto. t need to rebuff the cut-back policies of the Tories in the clearest possible way places an exceptionally heavy responsi- voters of St. George,” the Communist candi- “The urgen bility on the “Of the $92 million by which the provincial government has increased its educational grants this year only a paltry $2 mil- lion is coming into Metro To- ronto. No one can quarrel with assistance to education in rural and northern Ontario. But there is no need to carry this through at the expense of the working people of Ontario’s largest city. Impose Wage Freeze “The same pattern is applied in regard to. new construction. The Metro school authorities ask permission to increase capital spending by $47 million. They are allowed $19 million — only $7 million of which can be rais- ed in debentures. “The effect of the province’s ceilings on education spending is to impose a wage freeze on teachers,’ Mr. Mossop “although no group of salary or wage earners the brief, nine-point Act, but by © Continued on page 10 Ontario government strangling education is having its income so frozen— as indeed they should not have. This goes together with increas- ed pupil-teacher ratios, a heavier workload on fewer maintenance men, elimination of swimming programs, and curtailment of li- brary services. . “We of the Communist Party of Canada are saying emphatic- © Continued on page 10 — Communist BRIAN MOSSOP TIM BUCK - We have been informed by the Communist Party that Comrade Tim Buck has suffer- ed another stroke while rest- ing in Mexico. Readers of the Canadian Tribune and mem- bers of the Communist Party of Canada all hope that before long he will recover. Comrade Buck is expected to return to other | Canada sometime this month. PACIFIC TRIBUNE—FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1973—PAGE 5